gcu students’ association: campaigns toolkit may …...campaigns toolkit page | 2 ......
Post on 10-Jul-2020
9 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
GCU Students’ Association: Campaigns Toolkit
May 2015
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 2
Introduction – Page 3
GCU Students’ Association – a campaigning organisation
Ideas
What is a Campaign?
What is not a Campaign?
How to make an Impact
The Campaigns Cycle – Page 4
Analysing the issue – Page 5
o Identify the issue
o Evidence
o Widely felt, Deeply felt, Winnable
o Problem and Solution Trees
Developing Strategy – Page 8
o Campaign Aim – the impact of your campaign
o Outcomes
o Influence and Power
Planning – Page 10
o Actions
o Campaign Plan
Campaign Delivery and Monitoring Progress – Page 11
o Building your campaign team
o Engaging people - Anger, Hope, Action and Apathy Staircase models
o Organisation and communication
o Monitoring Progress
Evaluation – Page 13
o Evaluating the campaign
o Celebration and saying thank you
o What’s next?
Resources – Page 15
Funding
Support
o Communications
o Room Bookings
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 3
Introduction
GCU Students’ Association – a campaigning organisation
The Students’ Association is a campaigning organisation and our mission is to represent and enable
GCU students to enhance all aspects of their student experience. This means that we represent all
students studying at GCU to the university, within the local community and nationally to the Scottish
and UK governments, through the National Union of Students (NUS). We are a membership-led
organisation that works to make the lives of GCU students better.
When our elected Full Time Officers don’t directly represent GCU students, we work to support our
members to take on representative or campaigning roles to represent other students. We support
Liberation and Representation Officers, the GCU London Rep, School Officers, Class Reps and
volunteers to improve the GCU student experience. We also want to encourage our individual
members to be empowered to make things better and campaign for change within their local
communities.
Find out more about our Mission, Vision and Values: www.GCUstudents.co.uk/aboutus
Ideas
Many of the campaigns that we run, or that we support students to run, originate from Ideas
generated by our members. When you see something that you want to change at GCU then we
suggest that you submit an Idea to us at the Students’ Association which can be the starting point for
the change that you want to see.
Some changes are simple and we can make these happen quickly just by getting in touch with the
right person. Other changes may require more work to be done and can be the starting point for a
campaign. This is where this Toolkit comes in – to be your guide to running a campaign to make the
change that you want to see.
By submitting an Idea, it also makes us aware of what you want to do and so we can offer support
and suggest it gets taken forward within the Students’ Association where it can be adopted as our
official stance.
For more information about Ideas and how to submit them: www.GCUstudents.co.uk/ideas
What is a Campaign?
Campaigning is the way in which we create change in the world. It is the coordination of people and
resources aimed at changing the behaviour of organisations and individuals.
Campaigning can take many forms including petitions, lobbying, demonstrations, letter writing and
publicity stunts. What unites these approaches is that they will have the common aim of achieving
the desired change and, ultimately, creating an impact on people’s lives.
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 4
What is NOT a Campaign?
Campaigns are not simply about raising awareness of an issue, because although greater awareness
can lead to change (and is usually part of a campaign) it is not an end in itself. For instance, it is good
to make people aware of the benefits of healthy eating but in a campaign what we are trying to
achieve is to get people to actually eat healthily.
Therefore simply setting up a petition, creating a group on social media or challenging a decision in a
meeting is not campaigning. Campaigning only happens when these actions are designed with a
clear aim and are backed up by a campaign plan.
It is great to make people aware of an issue but our aim is to inspire them to take action and help to
make change happen.
How to make an impact
The impact of your campaign is the difference it makes in people’s lives – the effect of your change
on the world. Understanding the impact you are trying to make is essential to running an effective
campaign. Continuing from our previous example, if we want more people to eat healthily, we might
attempt to reduce the price of healthy food options or provide classes on how to cook healthy
meals. Both approaches have the same intended consequence but it is likely that one approach will
be more effective than the other. This is why knowing the difference between the ends we are
hoping to achieve and the means of doing so is important – the actions we take in our campaign
should be those which most effectively achieve our aim.
In order to make sure that our campaign is effective, we make use of the Campaigns Cycle. This
approach ensures that our campaign is properly planned and delivered and that it is based on strong
evidence. It also makes sure that we take time to evaluate what we are doing at each stage of the
campaign. This Toolkit makes use of various tools as you work through the Campaigns Cycle to help
you to deliver an effective campaign with maximum impact.
The Campaigns Cycle
The Campaigns Cycle is comprised of five stages which are explored in detail within this Campaigns
Toolkit:
Analysing the issue to find a solution
Developing strategy – setting an aim and impact
Planning – mapping routes to influence and selecting tactics
Campaign delivery and monitoring progress
Evaluation
Using this approach helps you to plan a campaign in which your planned activities match the aims
you have identified and can be supported by your available resources.
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 5
Analysing the Issue
Identify the issue
The first step is to identify what you want to change, understanding the issue, and, ensuring you
have evidence and people to support your cause.
Your campaign will be seriously undermined from the outset if it is based on incorrect information.
No matter how passionate you are and how well you think you know your subject, make sure you
can support your position with evidence. Not only will this provide validation for your campaign, it
will also:
save time in the long-run; presenting false facts means starting again
build trust; people will see that you know what you’re doing
give you a clearer picture of your problem and possible solutions
help you respond if anyone questions what you are doing or why
If you want people to support you, you need to be able to tell them in simple terms why they should.
Research as widely as you can and from a range of perspectives to ensure that you have an objective
view.
If your campaign centres on a problem within the university, there’s a good chance that students at
other universities or students’ associations may have campaigned on the same issue in the past. The
Students’ Association can help research what other campaigners have done and where to get
sources of evidence.
Analysing the issue
Developing strategy
Planning
Campaign delivery
Evaluation
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 6
Evidence
Evidence to support your campaign can come in many forms and it doesn’t all have to be freshly
gathered for your campaign - existing sources of data and reports are often substantial pieces of
evidence when starting a campaign.
Various charities and campaigning organisations will produce information and make it freely
available for others to use. For example, in 2015 the consumer rights organisation Which? published
a list of universities that had unlawfully made changes to students’ terms and conditions – this is
evidence enough for any students’ association to campaign for this practice to end.
The National Union of Students publishes its research online and this can be a great source of
evidence for campaigns - http://www.nus.org.uk/research.
There are also a number of surveys carried out on an annual basis such as the National Student
Survey and International Student Barometer which give insight into students’ opinions about their
experience at university.
However, in other cases there will be the need to collect new pieces of evidence. There are many
different ways in which this can be achieved but some of most straightforward methods are through
surveys (online and/or face to face), going out and talking to people, and, organising small focus
groups. Whichever method you employ, make sure to take time to properly write your questions in
advance so that the answers you receive are meaningful and helpful to your campaign. For example,
finding out that 32% of students are dissatisfied with a university service doesn’t help your campaign
unless you find out why they are dissatisfied.
Widely Felt, Deeply Felt and Winnable
Unfortunately, for a campaign to be successful it isn’t enough to simply be right even if you are
backed up by evidence.
Students are most likely to engage with your campaign if they feel involved and represented by it, so
be prepared to explain how your campaign is relevant to them if they aren’t already convinced and
remember to take on board any feedback you receive; this is another type of evidence.
The best campaigns are those that are easy to understand and that tackle problems faced by many.
Before you begin, look at your research and ask yourself:
Is this widely felt?
o If your issue isn’t widely felt, you may need to put a lot of emphasis on informing
people before of what you are doing and why
Is this deeply felt?
o If your issue isn’t deeply felt, you may need to show people why they SHOULD care
you can use the Anger, Hope, Action and Apathy Staircase models covered later in
this document
Is it winnable?
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 7
o If your goal doesn’t seem achievable, it might be a good idea to break it down into
smaller, more winnable steps.
The answers to all three of these questions does not need to be “yes” right at the start of the
campaign – indeed many campaigns do not seem winnable at the start – but you must be prepared
for how you will build your campaign depending on these answers. Perhaps your initial campaign
action has a greater awareness raising element to it or that you make sure your campaign materials
explain why the issue is relevant to your target audience.
Taking time to write down answers to these questions is a useful way to answer these questions and
identify the ways in which you should factor their answers into your campaign plan.
Problem and Solution Trees
To help you breakdown the issue, think it through and identify solutions use the Problem Tree. Try
and involve a number of people to account for multiple viewpoints. You can download a copy of the
Problem Tree for use from our website: www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
1. Draw a tree and write your problem on the trunk of the tree
2. At the roots, write down the causes of your problem
3. In the branches, write down the consequences of your problem
Now either on the same diagram or by drawing a separate tree you can create a Solution tree to
solve your problem and address its consequences.
1. Write down your campaign’s aim (your solution on the trunk of the tree
2. At the roots write down solutions to your problem and try to make sure that all of the
causes have been addressed
3. In the branches, write down the effects of you campaign being successful
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 8
Combining the results of these exercises should give you a clear view of what is causing your
problem and the effects it is having as well as what you need to do to solve it (addressing the causes)
and how people will benefit when you do. This last point will help you to express the impact that you
campaign will make.
Developing Strategy
Campaign Aim – the impact of your campaign
The lasting effect of your campaign will be its impact. This is the change that comes from the
outcomes of your campaign. Returning to our earlier example of the healthy eating campaign, the
outputs from that campaign might have included distributing leaflets, organising cooking classes and
meeting with catering outlets about the price of healthier options. If you were successful then your
outcomes will include people eating more healthily by cooking healthier food and buying healthier
options. These are good outcomes but what is their impact?
To answer this question we return to why we would run such a campaign in the first place. The
problem to be solved is that people are suffering from poor health due to the food that they eat. The
impact we hope to achieve is our solution to this – improve people’s health by getting more people
to eat more healthily.
Having a clear campaign aim linked to the impact you want to achieve is essential and if it isn’t then
your campaign plan may not be working towards the correct outcomes.
Outcomes
In order to be able to plan your campaign you need to identify what outcomes would be measures of
success. Outcomes are different from outputs. Outputs are the actions you take during your
campaign; outcomes are what happen as a result of those actions. Each of your outcomes should
contribute towards achieving your Campaign Aim (your impact).
Mapping out your desired outcomes as campaign objectives is a useful way to approach campaign
planning and it ensures your campaign aim is realistic and achievable. One method of creating
objectives is to make them SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic & Time-bound):
Specific: state what is to be achieved in a clear and detailed manner.
Measurable: progress towards the desired outcome can be measured during the campaign
and you will know when it is complete.
Achievable: the outcome is something that is possible within the timeframe of your
campaign – there are no barriers in place which mean this definitely cannot be achieved.
Realistic: you have the resources available to achieve this outcome – this can take the form
of time, money or even the necessary skills to take the campaign forward.
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 9
Time-bound: In order to keep your campaign on track, it is important to set deadlines
otherwise the campaign may lose momentum.
Breaking down your campaign aim into objectives will form the basis of a campaign plan. It is useful
to prioritise these objectives so that you focus on the most important two or three to allow your
campaign to remain focused.
You can download a copy of the SMART objectives grid for use from our website:
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
Influence and Power
Having created objectives for your campaign, it is now important that you identify who you need to
speak to in order to achieve them.
All campaigns are ultimately aimed at getting organisations and/or individuals to agree with your
position on an issue. Therefore we begin by identifying the following groups who can affect the
decision making process:
Decision makers – the people or organisations who have the ultimate power to say yes or
not to your campaign aim
Influencers – the people or organisations who can shape the decision makers opinion
Allies – other people or groups who will benefit from your campaign aim being achieved
In universities, the Principal and the Executive Board are often the decision makers who can make
policy changes at institutional level. They are influenced by the people at the university – staff and
students – and the organisations that represent them – the trade unions and Students’ Association.
They are also influence by the government and external bodies such as the Scottish Funding Council
and the Quality Assurance Agency.
In a campaign within the university it
is most likely that students will be
your natural allies although some
groups will be more affected than
others depending on the issue.
However, staff can be allies to as well
as other organisations with an
interest in what happens at the
university such as colleges.
A useful exercise is to use a target
diagram and to place all of the
different people and organisations on
it charting both their position on the
issue (support or oppose) and how
much influence they have over it
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 10
(strong or weak).
Once you have done this it is also helpful to record each person and organisation in a power analysis
grid alongside their role, what motivates them and who they are influenced by and have influence
over.
You can download a copy of the target diagram and power analysis grid for use from our website:
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
By understanding who has influence and power, you can make sure you campaign is aimed at
convincing the people who matter the most.
Planning
Actions
Now that you have looked at your campaign strategy and decided upon your objectives, you need to
turn each objective into a series of actions.
The actions you choose will depend on what resources you have at your disposal as well as on the
nature of the objective and required outcome itself.
Whether the desired outcome is to influence specific decision makers, raise awareness of the issue
amongst, or change behaviours will dictate what the most effective action will be.
Possible actions can range as far as your imagination (and resources) allow. Methods to consider
include:
Lobby – meeting the decision makers and influencers to convince them to support your
campaign aim
Raise awareness – converting people to your cause through events, stalls and talking to
people
Gather support – show that your campaign is widely supported through a petition or vote in
the Students’ Association
Protest – hold a march or a rally to show a visible presence to your campaign and engage
your supporters
It is helpful to work out the best order in which to tackle your objectives at this stage too. Which is
the most logical to start with? Try to order them so one objective paves the way for the next.
Campaign Plan
Once you have generated some ideas, debated and decided on the most suitable actions for each of
your objectives you are ready to write your Campaign Plan. You can use the Campaign Planning
Chart and enter your activities, resources required, a timescale for each objective and who is going
to be responsible for it.
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 11
You can download a copy of the Campaign Planning Chart for use from our website:
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
Campaign Delivery and Monitoring Progress
Building your campaign team
As your campaign grows more people will become aware of it and the potential for your campaign to
grow increases. However, before starting out it is useful to make sure you have a large enough
campaign team to begin with.
One person is unlikely to succeed by themselves and with a group you gain the benefit of a wider
range of skills and ideas. With more people it is also possible to get more done and when setbacks
occur there is less chance of losing motivation.
In order to build you campaign it is helpful to start off by identifying the groups or people who may
be interested and thinking about how you could get them involved, what they can do to help and
what they would get out of it. It may be helpful to fill in the campaign team grid to map out who you
might want to approach.
You can download a copy of the campaign team grid for use from our website:
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
Once you have completed the grid you will know who to approach and how you will attempt to
recruit them to your campaign.
After recruiting a campaign, it is important that you engage with them meaningfully – they are not
there to do whatever you ask of them. Make it clear from the beginning of what you are hoping to
achieve and find out what their motivations are as well. Involve other members of the team in the
decision making process and always make sure to keep everyone up to date.
Where possible it is valuable to show campaigners the effect they are having and in any event, make
sure to thank them for what they are doing.
Engaging people - Anger, Hope, Action and Apathy Staircase models
Anger, Hope, Action
One method of engaging people with your campaign is through the Anger, Hope, Action model of
engagement. As the name suggested this begins with making people angry about an issue, showing
them that there is hope for a solution and the inviting them to get involved by taking action.
Anger - Make someone angry about the issue. Explain to them why it is unfair or unjust.
Some students may feel like ‘anger’ is a negative way of doing this but explain that
campaigning always takes place in response to the feeling of something being unjust and
that anger is the emotion that makes this happen.
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 12
Hope - Don’t just leave someone angry about the issue. Give them hope that it can change.
Identify why there is hope at this particular moment? Why is it the right time for this
campaign? Is there a real chance of success?
Action - The most important part of the conversation is asking someone to take an action
and sometimes this can be the easiest bit to forget. Always have a clear action you’d like
people to take and ask them to commit to it.
The Action can be anything that meaningfully takes the campaign forward, from coming along to the
next meeting of the campaign team to sending an email to their local MP.
Apathy Staircase
Although your campaign will be very important to you and you will know the value of it, not
everyone will immediately share your enthusiasm.
Encountering apathy is often a problem for campaigners but there are ways to overcome this. Quite
often apathy is not deliberate; rather it can be down to a lack of information or having different
priorities to those running the campaign.
To gain support you need to get people engaged. Go and out and show them how your campaign is
relevant to them or people they care about. Using the apathy staircase can help – start from the
bottom and work your way up:
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 13
Organisation and communication
Having a Campaign Plan in which all actions are clearly set is an important part of the organisation of
any campaign. If everyone knows what has to be done and what their own responsibilities are it
greatly increases the likelihood of the actions being delivered successfully. Therefore, make sure that
once the plan has been agreed upon that it is shared with all of the campaign team.
The campaigns team need to stay in communication in order to be effective and so it is worth
considering holding regular meetings or online discussions to make sure everyone is up to date on
the latest developments.
It is also useful to have someone responsible for keeping track of what everyone has done so that
the Campaign Plan can be updated and it is possible to review how well it is progressing.
Monitoring Progress
Throughout your campaign it is important to take time to monitor your progress and compare it to
the Campaign Plan. Doing so allows you to check if your campaign is on track and to change your
plans if your actions have gone better or worse than anticipated. For example, if you have failed to
reach the target number of signatures for your petition, are you going to present it anyway, look for
more signatures or not present it at all? Or in another example, if your campaign resources end up
being cheaper than anticipated, what are you going to spend the leftover money on?
Even when actions are successfully carried out, sometimes the outcomes are not those which you
have predicted and so this too is something to consider when monitoring progress.
If something hasn’t gone to plan then it is important to find out why this is the case as failing to
understand this could prevent the campaign from being successful.
Evaluation
Evaluating the Campaign
Evaluating your campaign, assessing to what extent you achieved your objectives and whether these
have brought about your overall campaign aim (or desired impact) is a crucial part of the
campaigning process. You need to know what changes you’ve brought about through your
campaign in order to communicate to your supporters and members what you’ve achieved.
If you’ve followed this toolkit then you’ll have been measuring your progress towards your
objectives as the campaign progressed so you will know which of these you have achieved.
If any of your objectives weren’t achieved, what were the reasons for this? Were the plans realistic?
Did the actions match up with what you were trying to achieve? Was this due to mistakes in planning
or external factors that could not have been anticipated? How would you prevent this happening
next time?
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 14
Make sure you spend some time analysing any “failures” and share what you’ve learned. This is how
our campaigning as an organisation will develop and grow and how we can avoid repeating the same
mistakes.
Measuring whether you have achieved your overall campaign aim is less straightforward. You can’t
just assume that if you achieved all of your objectives then your campaign aim has also been
achieved. It’s important to try to measure what impact the changes you’ve brought about have had
in reality. It may take time to really be able to see this so consider following up your campaign in a
few months’ time by holding focus groups or running an online survey to get an idea of whether
your campaign really has achieved its desired impact.
At this stage you can assess what else still needs to be achieved or if other issues have arisen and
feed that back into the beginning of the next campaigns cycle.
Celebration and saying thank you
When your campaign is complete it is important to celebrate what you have achieved even if you
didn’t fully meet your campaign aim.
Celebrating your success makes people aware of what has happened which is often an important
part of the campaign aim. For instance, if you had successfully campaigned for extended opening
hours at the library then you want students to know about the times they can now access the
building.
It is also important as it shows your campaign team to be successful which helps recruit people to
your cause for future campaigns and maintain momentum if there are further related issues on
which to campaign.
Finally, it makes the people who took part in the campaign feel valued, that their efforts did not go
to waste. Even if the campaign wasn’t successful you can still celebrate how much the campaign did.
Also take care to thank the people involved for what they did – it is the least they deserve and it also
makes it more likely that they will continue to campaign in the future.
What’s next?
The campaigning process is a cycle. Sometimes there is another obvious issue to campaign on next
or a piece of unfinished work from the last campaign. When there isn’t, the cycle doesn’t end – you
can take what you have learned with you into any future campaign. The approaches which did and
didn’t work, use of the tools in this Toolkit, the alliances and campaign teams that you have built –
these can all be used again in the future.
Taking time to reflect on your campaign is important to achieving success in the future. Sharing what
you have learned with the Students’ Association is also incredibly useful as it helps us to shape we
provide students with future campaigns. Completing a campaign reflective log is a good way to
capture these thoughts.
Campaigns Toolkit
Page | 15
You can download a copy of the campaign reflective log form for use from our website:
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
Resources
Funding
Funding for campaigns is available from the Students’ Association and can be applied for at any time
during the year. In order to apply for funds you will need to complete a funding application form
which outlines your campaign aim, the funding you require and how you intend to spend it.
Funding applications should be made at least two weeks in advance of when the funds are required.
If the issue on which you wish to campaign on has arisen suddenly then this timescale can be
accelerated at the discretion of the Executive Committee. They can be made retrospectively but
there is no guarantee that you will be awarded funding for money which has already been spent.
You can download a copy of the campaign funding application form for use from our website:
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/campaignstoolkit
Funding may also be available through affiliation as a Students’ Association society if you are forming
an interest group which will be running your campaigns. More information about setting up a society
can be found online at www.GCUstudents.co.uk/societies.
Please note that funds granted by the Students’ Association may only be spent on campaigning
activities related to the student experience and under no circumstances can funds be donated to
political parties, charities, trade unions or other external groups.
Support
Communications
The Students’ Association is able to help support you with the communications for your campaign.
We can put out messages through our Twitter and Facebook pages as well as in our all student
email. Depending on the campaign we can also post information on plasma screens and display
poster in official Students’ Association notice boards.
You can request messages to be shared by the Students’ Association at
www.GCUstudents.co.uk/communications
Room bookings
The Students’ Association can help facilitate the booking of rooms or stalls in the Students’
Association or in the University through our volunteer resources page -
http://www.gcustudents.co.uk/volunteerresources
top related